Looks like this isn't matching the password we have for you - give it another try

Remember me for 90 days

Why would this be useful? If you wanted to come back and look up your quotes, or buy anything else from us, you'd find all your details still here, so you wouldn't have to answer all the questions again - a bit of a result

Business Secretary Peter Mandelson has warned that a failure by banks to pass on any cut in interest rates to their customers would leave the public 'surprised and disappointed'.

Lord Mandelson acknowledged that the Government could not force the high street banks to cut rates, but he cautioned that small businesses and mortgage-holders would expect to see the benefit of a widely-predicted cut in rates by the Bank of England later this week.

One of the conditions of the Government's bail-out when it took a £37 billion stake in some of the country's leading high street banks had been restoring credit lines, he said.

Lord Mandelson told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme: "When official rates are being cut, it is not unreasonable for customers to see some benefit from that.

"People want to feel the benefits of that action and if it appeared that the banks were standing in the way between what the Government is doing and how the public wants to benefit, then I think many banking customers are going to be asking some difficult questions of the banks."